The structure of a Salmonella enterica serovar typhi gene located within the fim gene cluster and encoding a putative periplasmic chaperone-like protein involved in the assembly of type 1 pili was determined. This gene, named fimC, has the ability to encode a 26-kDa polypeptide which is similar, at the sequence level, to the PapD periplasmic chaperonin mediating the assembly of P pili of Escherichia coli, as well as to other periplasmic chaperone-like proteins involved in the biogenesis of pili or capsule-like structures of various Gram-negative bacteria. A comprehensive search through the literature and sequence databases identified 31 (putative) bacterial proteins that can be included in this protein family on the basis of sequence similarity. Results of a multiple sequence comparison analysis showed that several residues, including most of those known to be critical in maintaining the three-dimensional structure of PapD, are either conserved or conservatively substituted in all these proteins, suggesting an overall similar folding for all of them. It was also evident that members of this family are clustered into different subfamilies according to structural and phyletic data.
Type 1 fimbriae have been purified from a Salmonella typhi strain of clinical origin. Purified fimbriae retained their ability to bind to erythrocytes in a mannose-inhibitable fashion and, in doing so, behaved preferentially as a monovalent adhesin. SDS-PAGE analysis of the fimbrial preparation showed the presence of a 20-kDa major polypeptide component (fimbrillin) and of additional larger polypeptides present in smaller amounts. The amino-terminal sequence of fimbrillin was determined and turned out to be very similar but not identical to that of type 1 fimbrillins of other Salmonella serovars. A Western blot analysis of the purified fimbrial prepara tion using an antiserum raised against native fimbriae suggested that fimbrial proteins did not carry any major sequential epitope and that, in native fimbriae, conformational epitopes, possibly generated between different subunits, might provide for the major immunogenic epitopes. Analysis of different S. typhi clinical isolates using the anti-fimbrial antiserum showed an overall im munological similarity of these structures within this serovar.
The fimA gene coding for the major component (fimbrin) of type 1 fimbriae was mapped within the Salmonella typhi fim gene cluster, and its nucleotide sequence determined. The deduced amino acid sequence of S. typhi fimbrin is highly homologous to that of S. typhimurium type 1 fimbrin and showed similarity to that of other enterobacterial type 1 fimbrins. Downstream of fimA, an open reading frame was found, named fimI, able to encode a fimbrin-like protein. The fimI product could represent the counterpart, in type 1 fimbriae, of the PapH protein involved in cell anchoring and length modulation of Escherichia coli Pap pili. This genetic organization was found to be common to other Salmonella serovars, including S. typhimurium and S. choleraesuis.
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